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[Canada] Canadian Politics Redux

Started by Josephus, March 22, 2011, 09:27:34 PM

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crazy canuck

Quote from: Valmy on Today at 01:12:58 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 01:10:12 PMReagan has a lot to answer for, but Trumpism isn't really one of those things.

Not sure I agree. He sure did a bit to help Pat Buchanan along who you name dropped as a precursor.

Reagan got the support of the 'America First' movement and the proto-Trumpians.

But, I guess, to be fair Nixon had also done quite a bit of that.

Hmm, thanks, I did not know that there was a link between Buchanan and Reagan, other than the fact he was a relatively low level functionary during those years.  How did Reagan help him out when he became candidate Buchanan?

Valmy

Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 01:15:16 PMHmm, thanks, I did not know that there was a link between Buchanan and Reagan, other than the fact he was a relatively low level functionary during those years.  How did Reagan help him out when he became candidate Buchanan?

Low level? He was White House Communications Director.  :lol: That is a very senior position.

Buchanan got his legitimacy, and all those important jobs on Cable TV news, because of this. For decades he got to spout his views to millions of Americans on national TV.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

crazy canuck

Quote from: Valmy on Today at 01:18:58 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 01:15:16 PMHmm, thanks, I did not know that there was a link between Buchanan and Reagan, other than the fact he was a relatively low level functionary during those years.  How did Reagan help him out when he became candidate Buchanan?

Low level? He was White House Communications Director.  :lol: That is a very senior position.

Buchanan got his legitimacy, and all those important jobs on Cable TV news, because of this. For decades he got to spout his views to millions of Americans on national TV.

Ok, I concede the point.  But I still think communications being important is the tail wagging the dog.

Valmy

Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 01:19:58 PMOk, I concede the point.  But I still think communications being important is the tail wagging the dog.

Right well my point wasn't that Nixon and Reagan were out there trying to create a Trump regime, but rather they attempted to utilize and co-opt those forces. It backfired...well for us, not for them.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

Jacob

Quote from: Barrister on Today at 12:40:56 PMMy only assertion here is that Poilievre should be judged on his own merits (or lack thereof), and not based on whether he "sounds like Trump".

It is fair to judge Poilievre on his own merits. However, IMO "sounding like Trump" is one of those merits. It's a bit of a shorthand for the overall risk of whether  Poilievre is inclined to inflict Trumpist style damage on Canada. And that, in the end, is very important and therefore one of Poilievre's salient qualities.

To speak directly to his merits, some of my concerns are:

Poilievre showed up quite weakly on the tariff debacle. He didn't say much to begin with, his initial instinct being to pivot the conversation to "it's Trudeau's fault". I still don't have a clear sense of what he think the right response is here, and what his posture is going to be moving forward.

He was fairly supportive of the convoy which had an explicit objective among its leadership to overthrow the Canadian government. At the time the argument for not caring about that is that it was fundamentally goofy and unserious, but I think events in the US show that we can't just handwave that stuff away.

A third concern - where I expect you'll disagree - is that in these times of oligarch owned social media being used to undermine democracy (and oligarch ownership of most private traditional media), I think journalistic institutions like the CBC is integral to protecting democracy. And the desire to go all DOGE on the CBC seems to be one of Poilievre's more clearly articulated priorities.

crazy canuck

Quote from: Valmy on Today at 01:28:10 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on Today at 01:19:58 PMOk, I concede the point.  But I still think communications being important is the tail wagging the dog.

Right well my point wasn't that Nixon and Reagan were out there trying to create a Trump regime, but rather they attempted to utilize and co-opt those forces. It backfired...well for us, not for them.

Ok, that I agree with.  The Republicans should have known they were playing with fire.  But now I think we are saying the same thing.  Trumpism did not evolve from the Reagan revolution.  It's antecedents predate Reagan by decades.

Barrister

Quote from: Jacob on Today at 02:00:50 PMIt is fair to judge Poilievre on his own merits. However, IMO "sounding like Trump" is one of those merits. It's a bit of a shorthand for the overall risk of whether  Poilievre is inclined to inflict Trumpist style damage on Canada. And that, in the end, is very important and therefore one of Poilievre's salient qualities.

But what does "sound like Trump" mean?  For that matter, what is "Trumpist style damage"?

CC seems to denigrate Poilievre for using short phrases like "Axe the Tax".  On the one hand, yes, Trump does like to use simple phrases.  But is that a sign that Poilievre is going to stage a Jan 6-style coup on Canada, or that he is merely an effective communicator?

What I have liked about Poilievre for awhile is exactly his use of repetition and short phrases when questioning witnesses before Parliamentary committees (or in responding to reporters).  I think he's very effective in doing so.  But it also bares only the most superficial similarity to Trump.

QuotePoilievre showed up quite weakly on the tariff debacle. He didn't say much to begin with, his initial instinct being to pivot the conversation to "it's Trudeau's fault". I still don't have a clear sense of what he think the right response is here, and what his posture is going to be moving forward.

Here I think you're being too harsh.  Nobody really knows what the right response is - Trudeau included.  I don't think Trudeau's proposed replacements in Carney or Freeland really had much to say either.

"It's Trudeau's fault" is kind of true as far as it goes (pipelines!) - but of course isn't really an answer about what to do now, in 2025.

QuoteHe was fairly supportive of the convoy which had an explicit objective among its leadership to overthrow the Canadian government. At the time the argument for not caring about that is that it was fundamentally goofy and unserious, but I think events in the US show that we can't just handwave that stuff away.

I was not a fan of the convoys, but they were not particularly organized, and I think it's incorrect to say it had 'an explicit objective... to overthrow the Canadian government'.  Some of the leaders made individual comments about Trudeau turning power over to them in some fashion.

What made events in the US very very serious is that they were done at the behest of the then-outgoing President.  Poilievre spoke favourably about the convoy protests (I mean - they both didn't like Trudeau so of course he will) but Poilievre never voiced support for illegal activities.

QuoteA third concern - where I expect you'll disagree - is that in these times of oligarch owned social media being used to undermine democracy (and oligarch ownership of most private traditional media), I think journalistic institutions like the CBC is integral to protecting democracy. And the desire to go all DOGE on the CBC seems to be one of Poilievre's more clearly articulated priorities.

Yeah I disagree.  Where to begin.

"to go all DOGE" - the problem with what Musk is doing is the seeming illegality of it.  To take USAID as one example - there's nothing wrong with congress passing legislation to de-fund USAID.  Problem is that's not what DOGE is doing.  They're just announcing USAID won't get any money, despite it being previously authorized by Congress.

"Oligarch owned media".  Not sure when you're thinking of, because Media has long been controlled by large corporations.  In Canada we have Bell and Rogers - are you calling Edward Rogers an oligarch?

As for CBC - look I post a lot of links to CBC because I do appreciate it's ad and subscription free.  But it has a very obvious bias and has had for a very very long time.  It's also not clear to me that in an era when private news sources are struggling why we should have a publicly-funded competitor to them.

I could go on but my kid has hockey tonight...
Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.

crazy canuck

Quote from: Barrister on Today at 06:21:36 PMCC seems to denigrate Poilievre for using short phrases like "Axe the Tax". 

I merely pointed out that has been the only concrete policy point he has made, and it is now not an issue since everyone is on board with axing the tax. He is now left with no substantive policies. So what they are we to judge him on other than his rhetoric?



QuotePoilievre never voiced support for illegal activities.

He had to backtrack on his initial full throated support.